Meg Martin
@megl_martin
Researcher @FlindersUniversity | Functional morphology | Australian marsupials | 3D geometric morphometrics |
ally | she/her š³ļøāšš³ļøāā§ļø
ID: 3242728938
12-06-2015 00:58:47
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201 Followers
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Modern tree-kangaroos are only found in tiny pockets of rainforest, but we have found fossils all over Australia... and some of them were quite big! @MurdochUniversity Flinders Palaeontology Western Australian Museum The Australian Mammal Society mapress.com/zt/article/vie⦠theconversation.com/giant-tree-kanā¦
The Australian Mammal Society is extending their logo competition! Open to all and winner receives free registration to AMS conference 2023 in Adelaide, and a 1-year membership. Comp extended to 31st August. See website for more details: australianmammals.org.au/about_us/ams-lā¦
Join us for the The Australian Mammal Society September Seminar! Featuring Dr Steve Unwin and Dr Fiona Knox giving us an introduction to wildlife disease risk analyses. Seminars are open to the public, please register at us06web.zoom.us/meeting/registā¦
Very excited to share this paper, very many years in the making! Skull shape in carnivorous marsupials with Prof Withers and Meg Martin and very special thanks to Emma Sherratt Murdoch University Research ā¦lpublications.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.11ā¦
Several years in the making with two of the biggest brains in the field! Vera Weisbecker (she/her on Kaurna land) Emma Sherratt We unpack the who, the what, the where, the when, and the how of mammalian skull proportions and how they change with size across species. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/brā¦
But this review isn't just about skulls. We show how phylogenetic tests of allometry can be a problem when size correlates with phylogeny. As one reviewer said, it's like throwing the baby out with the bathwater! Emma Sherratt Vera Weisbecker (she/her on Kaurna land) onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/brā¦
Fresh ink! We look at how the skulls of rock-wallabies change with size and how size influences jaw anatomy and biting ability The tiniest species seem to be particularly good at biting Vera Weisbecker (she/her on Kaurna land) Meg Martin royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsā¦
Sizing up #skull #allometry - listen to D. Rex Mitchell discuss his #BiologyLetters paper in this seminar: ow.ly/zkws50Rbqap